Pulling Back The Universe: A Novella & A Short Story About Duplicating Success
By Susan Hart
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About this ebook
Mozart 2030 -- When a Genius Lived Again - After a wealthy man suffers an incredible loss, he deteriorates into a life of drinking and regret, until he is visited by a scientist who uses unorthodox methods and who is looking for a place to put his theories into practice.
This story set in the near future and it’s about a female police detective investigating a crime. Someone pushed an employee of a high tech company off a balcony and she wonders what it has to do with a computer chip found clutched tightly in a death grip in the dead man’s hand. She notices someone watching the scene and right after that, finds another chip--in much better condition than the first. Is the man in the crowd a secret admirer or the perpetrator? She soon gets deeper into the case and things start to unravel--not always in a good direction, either.
Susan Hart
I was born in England, but have lived in Southern California for many years. I m now retired and live in the Pacific NW in a little seaside city amongst the giant redwoods and wonderful harbor, almost at the Oregon border. My husband and I have one cat, called Midnight and she is featured in two of my latest Sci-Fi short stories. I love Science Fiction, animals, and trying to help others. I publish under Doreen Milstead as well as my own name. My photo was taken right before the coronation of QE II in the UK.
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Pulling Back The Universe - Susan Hart
Pulling Back The Universe: A Novella & A Short Story About Duplicating Success
By
Susan Hart
Copyright 2017 Susan Hart
Mozart 2030: When a Genius Lived Again
Clone, Or Not A Clone?
Mozart 2030: When a Genius Lived Again
Synopsis: Mozart 2030 -- When a Genius Lived Again - After a wealthy man suffers an incredible loss, he deteriorates into a life of drinking and regret, until he is visited by a scientist who uses unorthodox methods and who is looking for a place to put his theories into practice.
The set of laws that prohibited human cloning had various fanciful and technical names, but to all parties concerned the purpose of the laws was very clear. Even years before the first, slightest signs of success had become evident, such experimentation was forced deep within the underground. Of course, the drive had always been there to use cloning for the ultimate purpose of making human life.
With the UN’s aggressive prohibition in place on a global basis, not a single government had even considered funding the research. There were operations functioning underground though, some of them staffed with the most promising minds in the world, all funded by very rich, eccentric benefactors who each possessed a nearly maniacal determination. Eccentric benefactors such as the famed Bartholomew Richardson.
Bartholomew Richardson had never considered the need to delve into science in the past. He had mused over the sensationalized news stories of successful animal cloning with less than halfhearted interest. His devout philanthropy had been relegated mostly to his first passion in life: Music. All over the world, Bartholomew had donated opera houses and funded symphony orchestras in response to this passion, so science had been nothing that piqued his interest.
He was a compulsive collector of antiquated sheet music and instruments. Much of his collection was on loan to some of the country’s finest museums, and it was often said that his personal collection, kept secret within his own home, rivaled that of any collection of music in the world.
Bartholomew could play many of these instruments, including the old ones that had long since fallen out of regular use in performing and recording, as well as some of the true masters ever had. His own son was just a toddler now, but Bartholomew dreamed of the day that the boy would take to these instruments and this wondrous music with a shared level of passion.
It was in the summer of 2015 though, when a terrible accident had robbed him of his wife and young son; the true loves of his life, and plunged Bartholomew Richardson into a world of darkness unknown to him before. There was no music there, only immense sorrow. He soon lost all interest in anything he’d ever cared about, fixating only on what had been so unfairly taken from him.
For a long time, Bartholomew Richardson was on a downward spiral. For the once great and envied man, a form of madness was beginning to take hold of him. He receded from the public eye and quickly faded from the interest of most of the world. There was, however, one man who was still keeping tabs on Bartholomew Richardson, watching him from afar.
Doctor Tobias Matthews had also been doing all that he could to remain unseen by the public eye. This was accomplished easy enough.
When he was young and living in Munich, Dr. Matthews had been acclaimed one of the most intelligent and promising scientists of his time. His work, from the beginning, had been groundbreaking, innovative and very promising. What’s more, Dr. Matthews had positioned himself on the border of a scientific field that, once explored more fully, would redefine the laws of a natural life as we know it.
To be in such a revered position in the world of science comes to very few people, and Dr. Matthews knew that. He also realized how other people could and would be jealous of his success, especially when it came to sensitive items of interest. His mere presence amid such experimentation was often brutally volatile and now, after almost forty-five years of constant hard work, it had forced him to flee the only home he had ever known and renounce his German citizenship. Dr. Matthews finally had to slip into the great melting pot – the United States of America.
For years, the most miniscule bit of Dr. Matthews’s work had been under the constant scrutiny and attack of the United Nations, but it was not their prohibition of such experimentation that had forced his hand and driven him from Germany. Rather, it was the competition that had done him in – the better funded, and lesser known, scientists in Europe who had made it necessary to leave. They had the money, thus the power, to establish their work in anonymity while they forced Dr. Matthews to halt his research, his life’s work, and flee. Or so he had made it appear.
So it was that when tragedy fell upon Bartholomew Richardson, Dr. Tobias Matthews began to pay very close attention, waiting patiently for over a year to make certain the timing was perfect before he exposed himself to anyone.
At the same time, Bartholomew Richardson faded into the woodwork of society. He now moved about completely unnoticed, no longer pointed out as the rich music aficionado he once was, and the anonymity was something new to Bartholomew. He had taken up a regular seat at an old cracked booth in the back of a greasy dive in a questionable part of town. The dive and its bar hadn’t been frequented by the upper class in forty years, but Bartholomew could care less. He was happy in his old booth, satisfied to be alone and without the bother of attention.
Hardly anyone came into the old dive anymore, and the few that wandered in were regulars who kept to themselves, happy for the aloneness the dive afforded them. Although the bartender knew all the regulars by sight, and some by name, he treated each of them as if he had never seen them before. As the owner of the dive, the barkeep knew that he gave them a place to disappear anytime they wanted. It was the barkeeps version of good customer service. They all understood each other.
So, it was a perfect setting for Dr. Tobias Matthews to approach Bartholomew Richardson for the first time.
As was his daily habit at this point in the day, Richardson was drunk when Dr. Matthews took a seat across from the man in his old cracked booth at the back of the dive. Quickly, Dr. Matthews realized that Richardson was practically drunk beyond comprehension; so much so that the doctor could hardly introduce himself
Mr. Richardson, Sir, I’m Dr. Tobias Matthews,
the doctor said, trying his best to keep the nervous jiggle out of his voice.
Richardson mumbled something in response, and then